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New York Jury Awards Tenant Damages for Slip and Fall on Icy Stairway
A New York jury has decided that a landlord was 65 percent responsible for a tenant's fall on an icy staircase and the tenant was responsible for 35 percent, resulting in a final award of damages to the tenant of about $22,000.As Law and Technology Merge, There's Potential for Innovation—and Harm
Northwestern's law and engineering schools have teamed up to solve real-life problems for Big Law firms—and to guard against unintended risks.Data Breaches Look to Be the Next Trend in Class Action Litigation
The next wave of class action lawsuits will be the result of massive data breaches, according to the eighth annual Carlton Fields Class Action Survey.Fifth Circuit Reinstates Claims in Free-Speech Case Over Deleted Facebook Comments
The case claims a county sheriff violated free-speech rights by deleting comments and banning a user from a public Facebook page it created and maintained.Federal Lawsuit Alleges New Haven Police Racially Profiled, Beat Disabled Man
Danny Robles has filed a federal lawsuit against eight New Haven police officers alleging that, although he did nothing wrong, officers ordered him out of his car and subsequently beat him. He is seeking compensatory and punitive damages.View more book results for the query "*"
Arnall Golden Breaks $1M PEP Milestone
The Atlanta-based firm marked a couple of financial milestones in 2018. “We were up in every major practice area," said its managing partner, Jonathan Eady.Harleysville Ins. Co. v. Mega Sec. Corp.
Harleysville Ins. Co. v. Mega Sec. Corp.An appellate court in New Jersey has ruled that an insurance company had no duty to defend its insured in a…Sedona Conference Cautions Against Siloed Approach to Information Governance
In an update to its 2014 information governance guide, the Sedona Conference advises organizations to be unified in how to govern information to better protect themselves against risks and runaway costs.Faxes Considered Damage Despite Incorrect Assumption that Recipients Had Agreed to Reception
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit has ruled that in the following case the insurer had no duty to cover a class action lawsuit alleging that its insured had sent hundreds of thousands of ”junk faxes”, even if the insured took this action based on the belief that the recipients had agreed to receive the faxes. In handing down this decision the 11th Circuit agreed with the federal district court in Georgia.Cremation Mystery Besets Family: 2 Sets of Ashes for 1 Man
Sitting beside the bronze urn in their lawyer's office, Robert Nero Sr.'s widow, Corene, right, and his daughter, Gloria Nero Rolle, demand to know if the ashes inside are Nero's or someone else's.Trending Stories
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